Fill in the blanks to help the office manager send a polite but firm email to the team.
Please note that the new office equipment is extremely fragile. Furthermore, one of the new printers has already jammed because someone tried to print a sandwich recipe on cardboard.
Please note that the new office equipment is extremely fragile.
"Equipment" is an uncountable noun in English. It refers to a whole group of items as a single concept, so it cannot be pluralized (no "equipments") and always takes a singular verb (is).
Furthermore, one of the new printers has already jammed because someone tried to print a sandwich recipe on cardboard.
The phrase "one of the..." must always be followed by a plural noun. You are singling out one item from a larger group of many items, so it must be "one of the printers" (not "printer").
Noun
A noun (from Latin nōmen, literally meaning "name") is a word that functions as the name of some specific thing or set of things, such as living creatures, objects, places, actions, qualities, states of existence, or ideas. Linguistically, a noun is a member of a large, open part of speech whose members can occur as the main word in the subject of a clause, the object of a verb, or the object of a preposition.
Lexical categories (parts of speech) are defined in terms of the ways in which their members combine with other kinds of expressions. In English, nouns are those words which can occur with articles and attributive adjectives and can function as the head of a noun phrase.
Subject
The subject is the part of a sentence or clause that tells you who or what the sentence is about. It typically comes before the verb and controls the verb's form — meaning the verb must agree with the subject in number and person.
How to identify the subject
The subject is usually a noun, pronoun, or noun phrase that performs the action or is described by the predicate.
- She works at a hospital.
- The old bridge collapsed during the storm.
- Running every morning keeps me healthy.
The verb agrees with the subject: She works (singular) vs. They work (plural). This subject-verb agreement is one of the most reliable ways to find the subject.
Self-check trick: Ask "Who or what + verb?" to locate the subject. "Who works at a hospital?" → She. That's your subject.
Types of subjects
- Simple subject — the core noun or pronoun alone: Dogs bark.
- Complete subject — the simple subject plus all its modifiers: The two large dogs next door bark every night.
- Compound subject — two or more subjects joined by a conjunction: Coffee and tea are available.
Tricky cases
Sometimes the grammatical subject isn't the "doer." In passive sentences, the subject receives the action:
- ❌ Thinking the subject must be the doer: "The window" broke itself?
- ✅ The window was broken by a ball. (The window is the subject, but the ball did the breaking.)
English also uses dummy subjects — words like it or there that fill the subject position without carrying real meaning:
- It is difficult to learn French.
- There are three problems with this plan.
In the first example, the "real" subject (the thing that is difficult) is to learn French, but grammatically it holds the subject slot. These are sometimes called expletive subjects.
Why it matters
Getting the subject right is essential for subject-verb agreement, choosing correct pronoun forms (he vs. him), and building clear sentences. Misidentifying the subject is one of the most common sources of grammar errors, especially with longer or inverted sentences.
Practice identifying subjects and building correct sentences with challenges like Basics. Common Questions. and Basics. Pronouns and Possessives..
Count Nouns
In linguistics, a count noun (also countable noun) is a noun that can be modified by a numeral) and that occurs in both singular and plural forms, and that co-occurs with quantificational determiners like every, each, several, etc. A mass noun has none of these properties, because it cannot be modified by a numeral, cannot occur in plural, and cannot co-occur with quantificational determiners.
Examples
Below are examples of all the properties of count nouns holding for the count noun chair, but not for the mass noun furniture.
Occurrence in plural/singular.
- There is a chair in the room.
- There are chairs in the room.
- There is chair in the room. (incorrect)
- There is a furniture in the room. (incorrect)
- There are furnitures in the room. (incorrect)
- There is furniture in the room.
Co-occurrence with count determiners
- Every chair is man made.
- There are several chairs in the room.
- Every furniture is man made. (incorrect)
- There are several furnitures in the room. (incorrect)
Some determiners can be used with both mass and count nouns, including "some", "a lot (of)", "no".
Others cannot: "few" and "many" are used with count items, "little" and "much" with mass. (On the other hand, "fewer" is reserved for count and "less" for mass, but "more" is the proper comparative for both "many" and "much".)
Mass Nouns
In linguistics, a mass noun, uncountable noun, or non-count noun is a noun with the syntactic property that any quantity of it is treated as an undifferentiated unit, rather than as something with discrete subsets. Non-count nouns are distinguished from count nouns.
In English, mass nouns are characterized by the fact that they cannot be directly modified by a numeral without specifying a unit of measurement, and that they cannot combine with an indefinite article (a or an). Thus, the mass noun "water" is quantified as "20 litres of water" while the count noun "chair" is quantified as "20 chairs". However, both mass and count nouns can be quantified in relative terms without unit specification (e.g., "so much water," "so many chairs").
Some mass nouns can be used in English in the plural to mean "more than one instance (or example) of a certain sort of entity"—for example, Many cleaning agents today are technically not soaps, but detergents. In such cases they no longer play the role of mass nouns, but (syntactically) they are treated as count nouns.
Some nouns can be used indifferently as mass or count nouns, e.g., three cabbages or three heads of cabbage; three ropes or three lengths of rope. Some have different senses as mass and count nouns: paper is a mass noun as a material (three reams of paper, two sheets of paper), but a count noun as a unit of writing (the students passed in their papers).
Collective Nouns
Collective nouns are nouns that – even when they are inflected for the singular – refer to groups consisting of more than one individual or entity. Examples include committee, government, and police. These nouns may be followed by a singular or a plural verb and referred to by a singular or plural pronoun, the singular being generally preferred when referring to the body as a unit and the plural often being preferred, especially in British English, when emphasizing the individual members. Examples of acceptable and unacceptable use given by Gowers in Plain Words include:
- A committee was appointed to consider this subject. (singular)
- The committee were unable to agree. (plural)
- The committee were of one mind when I sat on them. (unacceptable use of plural)
Singulars and Plurals
English nouns are inflected for grammatical number, meaning that if they are of the countable type, they generally have different forms for singular and plural. This article discusses the variety of ways in which plural nouns are formed from the corresponding singular forms, as well as various issues concerning the usage of singulars and plurals in English. For plurals of pronouns, see personal pronouns
Verb
A verb is a word that expresses an action, a state, or an occurrence — and it's the engine of every English sentence. Understanding how verbs work is foundational to everything else in English grammar, from forming questions to building complex sentences.
Verb Forms
Most English verbs have five inflected forms:
- Base form (go, write, climb) — used as an infinitive, imperative, present subjunctive, and present indicative in all persons except third-person singular.
- -s form (goes, writes, climbs) — used for the present tense, third-person singular (she writes).
- Past tense (went, wrote, climbed) — also called the preterite.
- Past participle (gone, written, climbed) — identical to the past tense for regular verbs, but often different for irregular verbs.
- -ing form (going, writing, climbing) — serves as the present participle and gerund.
The verb be is a special case with more forms than any other English verb (am, is, are, was, were, been, being). Modal verbs like can, must, and should have fewer forms than typical verbs.
Main Verbs and Auxiliaries
Verbs in English often appear in combinations: one or more auxiliary verbs paired with a main verb.
- The dog was barking very loudly.
- My hat has been cleaned.
- Jane does not really like us.
The first verb in the combination is the finite verb (it carries tense and agrees with the subject). The rest are nonfinite (infinitives or participles). Notice that these verbs don't always sit next to each other — as in does not really like.
Tense, Aspect, and Mood
English expresses tense (time reference), aspect (how an action unfolds over time), and mood (the speaker's attitude toward the action) mostly through verb combinations rather than word endings. That's why you'll encounter labels like "present progressive" or "conditional perfect" — these are specific tense–aspect–mood combinations built with auxiliaries.
Self-check: If you can change the time of a sentence by swapping one word (She runs → She ran), that word is the verb.
Keep Practising
To build your verb skills from the ground up, try these challenges: Basics. "To be" in Present Tense, Basics. Common Uses of Auxiliary Verbs, and Transitive and Intransitive Verbs.
B2 | Upper Intermediate
B2, or Upper Intermediate, is the fourth level on the CEFR scale. It marks the point where you move from "getting by" to genuinely comfortable communication — handling complex topics, expressing nuanced opinions, and understanding most of what you read or hear in real-world contexts.
What a B2 user can do
At this level, you're expected to:
- Understand complex texts on both concrete and abstract topics, including technical discussions in your own field.
- Follow extended speech and lectures, even when the structure isn't entirely clear, as long as the topic is reasonably familiar.
- Interact fluently and spontaneously enough that conversations with native speakers flow naturally — without strain on either side.
- Produce clear, detailed text on a wide range of subjects, using connectors and cohesive devices to build well-structured arguments.
- Explain and defend a viewpoint on a topical issue, weighing the advantages and disadvantages of different options.
- Recognize implicit meaning — reading between the lines in demanding, longer texts.
What B2 grammar looks like in practice
B2 is where grammar stops being about isolated rules and starts being about flexibility and precision. You're expected to control structures like:
- Advanced conditionals and mixed conditionals — moving beyond simple if-clauses to express hypothetical and counterfactual meaning.
- Passive voice in varied tenses and contexts, not just present and past simple.
- Reported speech with correct sequence of tenses, including backshifting and reporting verbs.
- Participle clauses and the distinction between participles and gerunds.
- Comparative and superlative structures beyond basic -er/-est, including double comparatives and qualifying expressions.
Errors still happen at B2, but they rarely cause misunderstanding. The goal is controlled, flexible use of language across social, academic, and professional settings.
How B2 fits in the CEFR progression
B2 builds directly on the foundations of B1 (Intermediate) and prepares you for C1 (Advanced). Many university entrance exams, professional certifications, and immigration requirements target B2 as the minimum standard.
Self-check: If you can read a newspaper editorial, follow most of a TED talk without subtitles, and write a clear essay arguing a position — you're likely operating at B2.
Ready to test yourself? Try Is your English level B2/Upper Intermediate? or practise specific B2 grammar with challenges like Basics. Advanced Conditionals And "wish", Basics. Passive Voice, and Sequence of Tenses in Indirect Speech.
Difficulty: Medium
Medium difficulty. Difficulty levels represent author's opinion about how hard a question or challenge is.